Foreseen upgrades over the next decades enable LHC to operate at a higher luminosity (HL-LHC). Accordingly, the optical links designed to transmit particle collision data need to be hardened against increased radiation level, allowing for a reliable communication. In this paper we study the fibre cabling design of a link between the transceiver optical front-end and the data control room. The radiation penalty calculation takes temperature drop down to -30°C into account. The proposed solution concatenates radiation-resistance and conventional fibres using multi-fibre interconnections. The end-to-end link loss during HL-LHC lifetime is estimated strictly less than 3.5 dB complying with predefined margin.
The Large Hadron Collider at CERN entered into its first 18
month-long shutdown period in February 2013. During this period the
entire CERN accelerator complex will undergo major consolidation and
upgrade works, preparing the machines for LHC operation at nominal
energy (7 TeV/beam). One of the most challenging activities concerns
the cabling infrastructure (copper and optical fibre cables) serving
the CERN data acquisition, networking and control systems. About
1000 kilometres of cables, distributed in different machine areas,
will be installed, representing an investment of about 15 MCHF. This
implies an extraordinary challenge in terms of project management,
including resource and activity planning, work execution and quality
control. The preparation phase of this project started well before
its implementation, by defining technical solutions and setting
financial plans for staff recruitment and material supply. Enhanced
task coordination was further implemented by deploying selected
competences to form a central support team.
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